I am interested to know how all those payload are mounted on PSLV's payload adapter. Cartosat 2 Series is the primary payload, and remaining 103 satellites are co-passengers.
Usually, PSLV mission brochures used to depict how payloads are mounted on its payload adapter. However, it isn't shown this time.
a) Cartosat 2 Series - primary payload.
b) 88xDove (88x3U CubeSats) - 22 QuadPack[1] deployers.
c) 8xLEMUR (8x3U CubeSats) - 2 QuadPack deployers.
e) INS-1A and INS-1B are not in CubeSat format. So, they need to be mounted separately on payload adapter.
So, we have a primary payload + 25 QuadPack deployers + 2 nano-sats. Hopefully we'll get some info during mission live broadcast on how these payloads are mounted on PSLV.
88 of these are Planet Labs's Dove satellites, which are 4kg, 3U (10x10x30cm) satellites. From what I understand, the goal of these is to image the entire earth every day at 3-5 meter resolution.
The US has surprisingly few restrictions on satellite imagery until you get below ~50cm resolution. Beyond a short list of nations/groups that the US has strict export controls with (e.g. N. Korea), there aren't any restrictions at all on who can be sold imagery. Other countries (e.g. Canada) actually have considerably more restrictions on collecting and selling imagery.
It depends. There is some debate as to how one measures resolution. With nanosats one has the option of taking many low-rez images and combining them into a higher rez. So does it depend on what is taken by the sat or what is delivered to the customer? Or what if the customer is the one combining the images?
Planet Labs is a US company so presumably they have US government approval for their sats. Their resolution is really low by today's standards so their imagery may not be considered sensitive. Or maybe they just blur out the same things that every other satellite company blurs out.
Can someone with understanding of satellite launches explain to a layman how the satellites get into their respective orbits when launched together like this?
Well, most of the satellites will want to be in about the same orbit - the fairly common sun-synchronous orbit, that passes over the same spot on earth every day. They probably want to spread the satellites out over the orbit, though.
I'm not sure if randomness would be enough to do this, but if not, they could probably control things a little bit, at least for the Dove satellites (88 of them). Since the Dove satellites can point themselves to take pictures, my guess is that they can also choose to point themselves either perpendicular or parallel to the orbital direction. Since there's a little bit of atmosphere left up there, over time that should be enough to intentionally spread the satellites out.
This is just a guess, but I know similar techniques have been used in the past on satellites that were out of fuel - for example, Skylab.
Either the last stage of the rocket is relit, the satellites can thrust themselves, or the small velocity they're released with over time will put the satellites in different orbits.
A relit final stage can put satellites in significantly different orbits. Satellite thrusters can do a little but only small orbital changes. And just releasing over a period of time will result in each sat being released on the order of 1 m/s which is enough to keep them separated but in the same orbit.
If a satellite has its own maneuvering capabilities, it can change its orbit (somewhat). These are mostly nanosats and cannot do that, so they'll stay in closely-related orbits. Spring-loaded separation from the launch vehicle will give them some difference, which will be magnified over time.
Some rideshare launches have multiple burns of the upper stage to put payloads in different orbits. The PSLV can do that, though I don't know if this one will.
The ISRO 2016-2017 budget is approximately $1.1 billion USD [1]. The national budget is about $301 billion USD [2]. That means that ISRO constitutes approximately 0.37%.
Entitlements come directly out of payroll taxes, so it's not a legitimate comparison. You'd want to compare defense spending, as that is the largest spending item that comes from federal income tax receipts.
When the latter fail to cover the former, those entitlements will be paid out of income taxes.
I don't think it's honest to lump out a preferred pool of spending like that. I could similarly claim all spending linked to corporate and capital gains taxes not be counted as part of the budget.
I mean, we could argue about this all day, no (although, the income is separated logically, which is why I made my argument in parent comment; it would take Congressional effort to spend payroll tax income on non-entitlement spending)? Sure, federal tax receipts will be used to replenish social security and Medicare, but I'm fine with that. We can afford to cut defense spending back, as we spend more than the next 8 countries combined. That's our own money being squandered.
In case someone hasn't come across "ABCD" before, it means American Born Confused Desi. Desi means someone of Indian heritage from the word Desh (country).
Your loyalty should lie with the United States, not the nation of your ancestors. This sort of ancestral-country-patriotism is not good. Let me quote Theodore Roosevelt:
"There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism. When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an American at all … The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that nationality, than with the other citizens of the American Republic … There is no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else." Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyphenated_American
I'm sure these hyphenations exist in every part of the World. It's these hyphenations that make a Nation stronger IMHO. In India, we have Luso-Indians (or Portuguese Indians), Dano-Norwegian Indians, German-Indians, French-Indians, Chinese-Indians, Parsis (Persian-Indians) etc. who made India their home. We don't force them to call themselves only "Indian". Why would you want someone to sever their past and their rich cultural heritage just to prove their Patriotism? Isn't that against the very notion of a "Free country" / "Republic"? As long as the citizen is not involved in any anti-National activities (terrorism, hate speech, espionage, disdain/disrespect for the Country's laws etc.) there is no need to bring that citizen's loyalty under suspicion.
There is no measure with which one can "feel more sympathy" for their ancestral-country than the country for which they have accepted citizenship. "Feel more sympathy" for what? Would an adopted child "feel more sympathy" for it's biological parents than the parents that nurtured it?
No reason why not -- those words were written the last time the US was having a huge backlash against immigrants. In that case it was a backlash against Catholics, and Europeans who weren't as white as Northern Europeans.
Today, being a hyphenated American is no big deal.
Usually, PSLV mission brochures used to depict how payloads are mounted on its payload adapter. However, it isn't shown this time.
a) Cartosat 2 Series - primary payload.
b) 88xDove (88x3U CubeSats) - 22 QuadPack[1] deployers.
c) 8xLEMUR (8x3U CubeSats) - 2 QuadPack deployers.
d) BGUSat (3U CubeSat), PEASSS (3U CubeSat), DIDO-2 (3U CubeSat), Al-Farabi-1 (2U CubeSat), and Nayif-1 (1U CubeSat) - 1 QuadPack deployer.
e) INS-1A and INS-1B are not in CubeSat format. So, they need to be mounted separately on payload adapter.
So, we have a primary payload + 25 QuadPack deployers + 2 nano-sats. Hopefully we'll get some info during mission live broadcast on how these payloads are mounted on PSLV.
[1] http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?filename=0...